unsuccessfully appealed. Having exhausted his administrative remedies, the rancher then filed suit claiming the decision was issued in violation of by Frank Dubois the Administrative Procedures Act. This suit was eventually dropped. I’m leaving out a bunch of legal mumbo-jumbo about changing counsels, briefs and response to briefs, providing adequate notice, etc. Eventually, two suits were combined. One where the rancher sues the Forest Service and the other where the Forest Service sues the rancher. The rancher filed suit seeking quiet title he following is my interpretation of a to the allotment, requesting the Court recent court decision involving a declare that “under the Quiet Title Act” the rancher and the death of a wolf. It may ranching entity “is the surface owner” of the not be what I think is right or fair, but it is, I allotment “by operation of specific legislabelieve, an accurate report on what the tive grants of Congress.” decision says. The following, straight from the Courts The rancher, who has a grazing allot- decision, summarizes the claims this way: “…Plaintiffs allege that the Allotment is ment that encompasses both the Gila and the Apache Greaves National Forests, pled their “private real property”—i.e., that they guilty to having “knowingly taken” a “hold legal and valid title” to it as “surface Mexican gray wolf. He was sentenced to estate fee-title owner[s]” who may “fully one year of unsupervised probation and utilize the value of the land” for “all agricultural and ranching purposes.” Plaintiffs paid $2,300 in restitution. The Forest Service then canceled the further allege that such “vested property rancher’s grazing permit. This decision was rights” are “valid existing rights that preNEW MEXICO FEDERAL LANDS NEWS
Wolves Kill, Permits, USDA Hacked & VR For Cows
T
Cattleman’s Weekend
Friday & Saturday, March 18-19, 2022
at Prescott Livestock Auction, Chino Valley, Arizona Selling 75 Bulls of All Breeds, 60 Performance Horses, and 200 Replacement Heifers and Cows
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22nd Annual Arizona Angus Assn. Bull Sale 45th Annual Arizona Hereford Assn. Bull Sale 34th Annual Prescott All Breed Bull Sale 24th Annual American West Horse Sale (Formerly the Ranch Remuda Sale)
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dated the Gila National Forest.” (emphasis added). The Complaint then implies that, as preexisting private property, the Allotment never became national forest land—or did so only to a limited extent (e.g., only as to its subsurface mineral rights). Instead, Plaintiffs allege that—from the late 1800s until today—the surface of the Allotment has remained private property and continually carried with it “valid existing rights” for its owners to use that surface for any ranching or agricultural endeavor, including the grazing of livestock.” Finally, we’ll see these ideas and legal concepts presented in Court, laid out for everyone to see. It will also be the opportunity to see the federales’ response to each of the allegations. It will be both educational and fun to see how this plays out. Except for one thing: the government never responded. Instead, the feds filed a separate lawsuit seeking a “writ of ejectment” to have the livestock removed, and the real kicker here, they filed a Motion to Dismiss the quiet title suit. Why? Because the Quiet Title Act contains a statute of limitations consisting of continued on page 56 >>